DANCING PILGRIMS. 5 !- SA1ETES' I 12) Oil i . i Have tlieir origin in ad Inactive or Disordered Liver. The most stealthy and fatal diseases confronting medical science, claiming more victims, annually, than war and famine combined. A puffiness under the dves, paleness and scanty or too copious urine mark the beginning of Bright's Disease. Wl en the liver is diseased, the kidneys in their effort to perform double work become affected. A simple " liver regulator " will not cure Kidney disease, for although it corrects the first cause, the Kidneys are still affected. A Kidney remedy will not do i because the source of the disease is not reached. A cure is a remedy combining both, a R. THAGHER' because it removes the iause and at the same time cures the Kidneys. It is the only preparation now on the market that actually t ! cures., Weakness in the small of the back, pains in loins and groins, numbness of the thighs. nigh colored or scalding urine, milky or bloody urine, frequent desire to urinate, nausea.vomiting, colic, constipation, hot and cold flashes, furred or unnaturally red tongue. These are the symptoms of diseased Kidneys don't neglect them. Only one remedy contains all the curative properties, scientifically combined, required in the treatment of Liver and Kidney diseases, and that is Dr. Thacher's Liver and Blood Syrup. A f re sample and "Dr. Thacher's Health Book," with confidential advice, for the asking. Write today. All druggists, 50 cents and $1.00 per bottle. THACHER MEDICINE COMPANY, - - CHATTANOOGA, TENN. LIVER .ft' BLOOD -SYRUP v v MANDRAKE (May Apple) YELLOW DOCK DANDELION' HYDRANGEA (Seven Barks) SENNA 1 SARSAPARILLA iENTIAN IODIDE OF POTASSIUM iUCHU jIUNIPER BERRIES Better Than Hli Own. They were discussing the .factors which make for success in the woijld when the knowing young -man said: "There's nothing like force of char acter. Now, there's Jones! Sure make his way in the world. He's will of his own, you know." "But Brown has something better his favor." j "What's that?" 44 A will of his uncle's." i FOR SALE BY THE SALISBURY E RUG COMPANY. T Ht bl OMAUH, to a t I in PETITION FOR DIVORCE North Carolina, Rowan county. J. M. Bostian vs. NOTICE Myrtle D. Bostian - j The defendant above named will take notice that an action entitled as above has been commenced in the nu perior court of Rowan county for' t ie purpose of being freed and divorc9d from the defendant from the bonds of matrimony; and the said defend ant will further take notice that s ie is required to appear at the next tei m of the Superior Court of said county to be held on August 28, and continue for two weeks, 1905, at the cov rt house of said county in Salisbury, N. C, and answer of deinur to the co 11- plaint in said action or plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief re manded in said complaint. This M ly 1905. J. F. McCTJBBINS Clerk of Superior CourtJ R, , Lee Wright, Attorney. 23 If Ton Treat It Properly It Will Re turn the Compliment. It Is not an uncommon thing to hear a man or woman say. "There is some thing the matter with my stomach." They never stop to think whether they themselves are not at fault instead of the stomach. It is so easy to blame the stomach. It can't say anything back." ; ' But the truth of the matter ; is the stomach is all right; nothing the mat ter with it at all. It Is what Is put into the stomach that Is causing the trou ble. The stomach knows when it re ceives something that will be injurious to the body or when it has been over loaded, and it protests against the in digestible article or the surplus amount of food.'.' -'I "' 1 It is acting as a friend and sending out a warning against this abuse. But instead of being grateful to the stom ach and leaving off the indigestible food and the big dinners the man or the woman continues to load it -with pie and cake, pickles and sauces, pork and pancakes and all sorts of' hr)rrid things, and then they complain that there Is something the matter swith their .stomachs. London' Mail. ; dangerous. A person sheltered under a low tree or shrub thirty or forty feet from a large and lofty tree is quite safe. If lightning strikes in 1 the im mediate vicinity it will hit the high tree as a rule, with few exceptions. "Water is a very good conductor, and it is well to avoid the banks of streams In a violent thunderstorm.-Petroit Tribune. Th lCjryitinii'H Lesson. Some years ago an Englishman was coming down the river Nile, in Egypi, on a large boat loaded with grain, and the birds came off from every village and ate the grain , piled on the deck. The Englishman asked the Egyptian captain of the boat, "Who owns this grain V" The Egyptian captain said, "I own it." Then the Englishman ask ed, "Why let the birds eat up the grain?" The Egyptian asked the Eng lishman, "Who made the birds?" The Englishman answered,'' "God." The Egyptian asked whether grain was a food which God Intended birds to eat. The Englishman said it was. The Egyptian said, "Can the birds sow and raise the grain for themselves?" The Englishman said. "They cannot." Then said the Egyptian: "Let them eat. God has provided enough for both theni.an: us." The HatlC' Uaiter'a Rune. A very rich lady offered Garcia any price if he would only teach her daugh ter. He refusedknowing well he could never obtain serious work from her; but, as the mother persisted, he hit up on a compromise. He asked the ladies to be present during a lesson, and he undertook, if the girl still wished to learn singing after hearing it taught, to teach her. The lesson began. The pupil, who seemed to the ftiL oners an already finished singer, h;." vo repeat passage after passage of the most diffi cult exercises before the master was satisfied. He insisted upon the mi nutest attention to every detail of exe cution. Mother and daughter ex changed horrified glances and looked on pityingly. The lesson finished, the master bowed the ladies ou. and in passing the pupil the young girl whis pered to her, "It would kill me!"". Senor Garcia, returning from the door, said contentedly: "They will not come again. Thank you, mon enfant, you sang well." London Mail. 1 The Annual Carnival of the "Saint of Ecbternacli. On every succeeding WUitsun Tues day from time immemoiial 10,000 to 20,000 pilgrims of-loth sexes and of ev ery age and condition of life dance for four or five hours at Echternach, In the grand duchy of Luxemburg, to an unmistakable polka tune and 'a.n appar ently nonsensical refrain. The central figure of this great Echternach "spring prozession" is St. Willibro'rd, who mi grated from Northumberland to the frontiers of the Black forest twelve centuries ago. Emperors and kings have in vain forbidden the "saints" of Echternach to Indulge In their annual carnival. With the peasantry of East Luxem burg and Eiffel the "springprozession" Is as popular today as it was in 1131, when King Lothaire came to pray at St. Willibrord's tomb. The simple mind ed dwellers on the banks of the Sure and the Moselle are firmly convinced that their best hope of freedom from nervous diseases in this world and eter nal salvation in the. next lies in this mystic dance of five steps forward and two backward, by which, after three hours' Indescribable toil, they cover the two or three miles intervening between the starting point, at which the pil grims receive the episcopal blessing and the goal at the steps of St. Willi brord's shrine. Wlieii the Tl-.under RolJjU Excellent authorities agree that In a thunderstorm the middle of a room Is much tlie safest place in a -house. A carpeted floor or one eovered by a heavy thick rug is better to stand on than bare wood. It is well to .keep away from chimneys and out of cel lars. In the open air tall trees jare Down on Ilia Lnok. "Oh. John," she exclaimed as she observed him getting into his over coat. "I hope you're not going to be out again tonight!" "I hope not." he replied absehtmlnd edly, "but it's quite likely. The cards have been running very badly for me lately." Philadelphia Ledger, unci or an Kpiciemic. In a house in the English' town of "Exeter sat two men. One of them in formed his companion that" the last time he was in the town he suffered rrom smaupox in mat very. room. in that corner," he said, "was a cup board where the bandages were kept It is now plastered over, but they are probably still there." And he took a poker, " broke down the plaster and found them. From, their "find" the two men contracted the disease, and it spread through the town and work ed fearful havoc. i - i 1 1 KNOWLEDGE AND CULTURE. The Two Do Hot Necessarily Walk Hand In Hand. High marks In examinations depend upon a trained memory and a power of acquiring irrelevant information. Culture, on. the contrary, is a sym pathetic assimilation of the best in the realm of thought and achievement. Culture is a slower process and a deep er, and Its reward strikes further In. Assimilation of the best that has been thought and accomplished affects not merely the brain, but the character the whole spirit of a man. Culture implies a soil plowed and fertilized, where whatever seed falls has the better chance for growth. Informa tion even in vast quantities so long as it remains mere information, used for purposes of passing examinations, need not affect the manners nor the morals of a man; both may remain hopelessly lax in an encyclopedian mine of facts. But culture affects primarily the manners and the morals. A cultured gentleman has external methods of getting on with his kind; he has the true sense of relationship, the feeling that all he can learn to feel or to t be is not for himself, but for service; he knows himself in a net work of human inter-relations. In the end the test of . knowledge is not ex amination marks; it is living. Har per's Weekly. We are having- a special sale of semi-porcelain .and Uric-a-Bracfora few days and we are offering" special induce ments in the way of prices and goods. There are good values hero, and you will make money by availing yourself of this op portunity. See the two window dis plays for the goods that are being offered and the prices that they will go at. They are all handsomely decorated goods, and when you see the prices on Tea cups, saucers, plates, vases, etc., you will be surprised. Avail yourselves of this op portunity. GORMAN & GREEN, Leading Jewelers and Opticians, SALISBURY, AND SPENCER, N. C. Too often the headache of this morn ing is a legacy from last night. SEMPER HEM Sailer's Flavor ing Extracts Have stood the test of years. Hi est awards and medals at Phila delphia, AManta, Richmond and Nashville Expositions.. 1 - - . I. - . - . . . ' - 1 .. . . ..... - ' . . . ' ! 1 2v C C C j' : ... : ; " i M UR0AY, MAT 2 7 NB And here is . 1 opportunity very seldom off ered : y Mo98e ;; .$12,0 MM SfoM 1 bOO 121 . Mmm ME -- 1 EVERYTHIlO FOR EVERYBODY Sttreett v: SAOSIBILJKY, Mo

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